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          Abstract

          Abstract The Tsimane Health and Life History Project, an integrated bio‐behavioral study of the human life course, is designed to test competing hypotheses of human life‐history evolution. One aim is to understand the bidirectional connections between life history and social behavior in a high‐fertility, kin‐based context lacking amenities of modern urban life (e.g. sanitation, banks, electricity). Another aim is to understand how a high pathogen burden influences health and well‐being during development and adulthood. A third aim addresses how modernization shapes human life histories and sociality. Here we outline the project's goals, history, and main findings since its inception in 2002. We reflect on the implications of current findings and highlight the need for more coordinated ethnographic and biomedical study of contemporary nonindustrial populations to address broad questions that can situate evolutionary anthropology in a key position within the social and life sciences.

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          A theory of human life history evolution: Diet, intelligence, and longevity

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            "Economic man" in cross-cultural perspective: behavioral experiments in 15 small-scale societies.

            Researchers from across the social sciences have found consistent deviations from the predictions of the canonical model of self-interest in hundreds of experiments from around the world. This research, however, cannot determine whether the uniformity results from universal patterns of human behavior or from the limited cultural variation available among the university students used in virtually all prior experimental work. To address this, we undertook a cross-cultural study of behavior in ultimatum, public goods, and dictator games in a range of small-scale societies exhibiting a wide variety of economic and cultural conditions. We found, first, that the canonical model - based on self-interest - fails in all of the societies studied. Second, our data reveal substantially more behavioral variability across social groups than has been found in previous research. Third, group-level differences in economic organization and the structure of social interactions explain a substantial portion of the behavioral variation across societies: the higher the degree of market integration and the higher the payoffs to cooperation in everyday life, the greater the level of prosociality expressed in experimental games. Fourth, the available individual-level economic and demographic variables do not consistently explain game behavior, either within or across groups. Fifth, in many cases experimental play appears to reflect the common interactional patterns of everyday life.
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              Allergy, parasites, and the hygiene hypothesis.

              The increase of allergic diseases in the industrialized world has often been explained by a decline in infections during childhood. The immunological explanation has been put into the context of the functional T cell subsets known as T helper 1 (TH1) and T helper 2 (TH2) that display polarized cytokine profiles. It has been argued that bacterial and viral infections during early life direct the maturing immune system toward TH1, which counterbalance proallergic responses of TH2 cells. Thus, a reduction in the overall microbial burden will result in weak TH1 imprinting and unrestrained TH2 responses that allow an increase in allergy. This notion is contradicted by observations that the prevalence of TH1-autoimmune diseases is also increasing and that TH2-skewed parasitic worm (helminth) infections are not associated with allergy. More recently, elevations of anti-inflammatory cytokines, such as interleukin-10, that occur during long-term helminth infections have been shown to be inversely correlated with allergy. The induction of a robust anti-inflammatory regulatory network by persistent immune challenge offers a unifying explanation for the observed inverse association of many infections with allergic disorders.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                gurven@anth.ucsb.edu
                Journal
                Evol Anthropol
                Evol. Anthropol
                10.1002/(ISSN)1520-6505
                EVAN
                Evolutionary Anthropology
                John Wiley and Sons Inc. (Hoboken )
                1060-1538
                1520-6505
                21 April 2017
                Mar-Apr 2017
                : 26
                : 2 ( doiID: 10.1002/evan.v26.2 )
                : 54-73
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ] Department of AnthropologyUniversity of California‐Santa Barbara Santa Barbara CA
                [ 2 ]Institute for Advanced Study in Toulouse ToulouseFrance
                [ 3 ] Center for Evolution and Medicine; School of Human Evolution and Social ChangeArizona State University Tempe AZ
                [ 4 ] Department of Human Behavior, Ecology and CultureMax Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology LeipzigGermany
                [ 5 ] Department of AnthropologyUniversity of Utah Salt Lake City UT
                [ 6 ] Santa Fe InstituteSanta Fe NM
                [ 7 ] Department of AnthropologyUniversity of New Mexico Albuquerque NM
                Author notes
                [*] [* ] Correspondence Michael Gurven, Professor of Anthropology at the University of California, Santa Barbara CA, 93106. Email: gurven@ 123456anth.ucsb.edu
                Article
                EVAN21515
                10.1002/evan.21515
                5421261
                28429567
                f8dfadba-d773-45c1-9bbc-3fd595304309
                © 2017 The Authors Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

                This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 22 December 2017
                Page count
                Figures: 5, Tables: 1, Pages: 20, Words: 16056
                Funding
                Funded by: The Tsimane Health and Life History Project has been funded by the National Institutes of Health/National Institute on Aging (NIH/NIA)
                Award ID: (R01AG024119, R56AG024119, P01AG022500)
                Funded by: National Science Foundation (NSF)
                Award ID: BCS0136274, BCS0422690, RAPID BCS1440212, DDIG0921429, DDIG0612908, DDIG1060319
                Funded by: UCSB Academic Senate
                Funded by: Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR) ‐ Labex IAST
                Categories
                Article
                Articles
                Custom metadata
                2.0
                evan21515
                March/April 2017
                Converter:WILEY_ML3GV2_TO_NLMPMC version:5.0.9 mode:remove_FC converted:03.05.2017

                evolutionary anthropology,behavioral ecology,evolutionary medicine,aging,cooperation

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